Kasey Stewart-feat

Other Images in this Gallery

Patricia Martin Rodier ’66 (right) with her laboratory technician, Melanie Obara. Photo courtesy of the University of Rochester.

Alexandra Gold diFeleceantonio ’08 is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Michigan.

Steve Bragaw speaks with WSET reporter Mark Kelly on Friday.

Steve Bragaw speaks with WSET reporter Mark Kelly on Friday.

Maite Killiam

Diane Dale Reiling ’73

Caroline Tade ’08, a third-year student at the Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine, sent this photo from the Philippines, where she helped out at a birthing clinic last summer. “I was drawn to naturopathic medicine as it focused on finding the root cause of illnesses, instead of pacifying symptoms,” she says. Tade says she studies everything from nutrition to minor surgery and environmental medicine, and will graduate with a Doctor of Naturopathic Medicine degree that allows her to practice as a primary care provider. She went to the Philippines with the school’s Naturopaths Without Borders program.

In Middle Egyptian, a hieroglyph depicting a hare with two squiggles represents the verb “to be.” Using English letters, it is expressed as “wnn.” No vowel sounds are preserved in Middle Egyptian script. Photo: “Nice hare” by Karen Green (flickr.com/photos/klg19), licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Susannah Higginbotham ’15 works on a Middle Egyptian text.

Walter H. Brown served on the Sweet Briar Board of Directors from 1986 to 1995 and was chairman for most of those years.

Nell Schroer

Tom Marcais

Tom Loftus

Deogratias “Deo” Niyizonkiza founded Village Health Works in his native Burundi. One of the organization’s newest projects is a women’s health pavilion, which it hopes to break ground on in 2015. Credit: Courtesy of Village Health Works.

Tiffanie Brown

Lily Hoblik (left) and Sadé Fountain. Photo by Andrew Wilds

Sadé Fountain. Photo by Andrew Wilds.

Alexis Quinn

Teresa Pike Tomlinson ’87

In one of Molière’s most popular comedies, Henriette (bottom right) will never get to marry her true love if her mother, aunt and sister have anything to do with it, as the three are under the thrall of a ridiculous, fortune-hunting pedant who has them duped. Top, from left: Amber Boyer ’17, Taneal Williams ’16. Bottom, from left: Ashlynn Watson ’16, Anna Gerber ’17. Photos by Anna ten Bensel ’17.

The Fletcher descendants are entwined with the history of Sweet Briar College. In 2010, members of the family attended a dedication ceremony at the slave cemetery on campus, where some of their ancestors are believed to be buried.

Workers ripped down old wallpaper and waged war on mildew. Next they painted — dark hunter green on the beadboard below the chair rails, pale pink above.

Ann Gateley, ’70, a medical doctor from New Mexico, is donating three weeks of her time.

Katie Adams, a rising high school junior from New Hampshire, traveled with her parents to participate in Sweet Work Days.

What’s he saying to Katie Adams?

Leigh Ann White ’86

Photo by Nancy McDearmon of the grave marker for Indiana Fletcher Williams at Monument Hill, July 2015

William Glackens (1870-1938), “Daisies and Anemones,” ca. 1930, oil on canvas, 24 1/2 x 20 in. First purchase made possible by The Friends of Art of Sweet Briar College, 1937.